- Billionaire co-founder Lei Jun focusing on new products
- The Mi5 will go on sale March 1 using Qualcomm processor
Xiaomi Corp. trotted out its latest marquee smartphones as
billionaire co-founder Lei Jun counts on the Mi5 to kick-start growth
and claw back share in a slowing Chinese market.
The new phone
will go on sale from March 1 starting at 1,999 yuan
($306), similar to
the previous generation, with a faster Qualcomm Inc. Snapdragon
processor and fingerprint-reader, Lei said Wednesday in Beijing. Xiaomi
became the world’s second most-valuable startup after a 2014 funding
round that valued it at $45 billion.
The Mi5 will form the vanguard for Xiaomi, which is trying to sustain a meteoric
pace of growth that saw it displace Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics
Co. from the top spot in its home market. The company began selling
phones in India and is branching into Internet services and new gadgets
to offset slowing domestic demand that saw it overtaken by Huawei
Technologies Co. in China.
“Xiaomi
should put aside concern about sales numbers and market share,” Lei
said at the event. “Thrilling new products and continued support from
Xiaomi fans are two key issues we should care about.”
Xiaomi had
been one of China’s most exciting startup stories of the past few years,
after a fairy-tale run of growth that helped it secure $1.1 billion in
2014 from investors including GIC Pte., All-Stars Investment Ltd. and
Russia’s DST. Its market share however has since been pinched by
competitors including Huawei, the country’s leading brand in the fourth
quarter.
It sold more than 70 million smartphones last year, falling well short of target
and prompting Lei to tell employees he was refocusing research efforts
into “cool stuff” like robotics and virtual reality. On Wednesday,
executives declined to comment on a Reuters report it planned to develop
its own mobile processor chip.
Shipments of Xiaomi’s Mi4 series exceeded 16 million units as of the end of January, Lei said.
Like
its peers, Xiaomi now heads into a challenging year. Apple and Samsung
have both warned of decelerating smartphone sales as markets become
increasingly saturated and the economy in China -- the world’s biggest
mobile market by volume -- slows.
The company also unveiled a
premium version of the Mi5 that sells for 2,699 yuan with both versions
running on Qualcomm processors and fourth-generation plus networks.
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